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/'{•'.•(! ,:;'l| S: r i ^ ii REAR ADMIRAL WINSLOW. .&.~- THE NORWOOD NEWS, NORWOOD, NEW YORK, Receives Appointment ; From the President to . -;'r .Command Pacific Fleet. ft S v 4 •* OUR \About Pr« It HI Utah upon ir\ conceivi the pol I be so i her pic the tvt Condon Amazo beJmet boots £ farce Whec woman ber no built fl feet ID thirty fl ant fii which usually descnbi midable She b the reqi Tell the considei women work at widely in office of inqu thoritles elded t( of abse travel a ltles a be Photo by American Press Association. GREATEST STRONGHOLD OF CZAR IS TAKEN Fortress of Bresf-Litovsk Sur- renders to Teutons. i '.- • ' - v .. LM V I f /' REK If crime thei- Res —Bur Crlr offeus udlcia A n cnme Bulwi The Will I hard. struct Bloc bltloui The fortress of Brest-Litorslt, Rus- Bla's greatest stronghold, lias been taken b\ the Gerni;ui and Austro-Hun- garian forces.. Tne official announce- ment of the capture of the stronghold made by the war office was as follows: \The fortress of Brest-Li tovsk has been taken by German and Austro- Hungarian troops. They stormed the Works on the western and northwest- ereti the enceinte of the foi tress. The enerqy thereupon surrendered the fortress.\ It was also announced that German advance guards have reached Bielo- stok The Russian forces which evacuated Blelostok are declared to be ID full retreat \Bast of Bielostok.\ said the official report ' along' the whole front from the Bialowieskn forest to the Pripet river swamps, the pursuit of the en- emy is In full swiiiK.\ The ease with which BresM.ltovsk was talven_js_ojie_ of the great military surprise* of the war. The fortress had been under direct attack only a ferr days. ; ROCKEFELLER, JR.. IS BLAMED | Responsible For Coal Strike, Says In- dustrial Report, i Blame for the'strike of the coal min- } ers In Colorado In 191-14 and for the j \unvielding and lawless policy that j finally lesulted in the horrors of the . Ludlow massacre\ is placed on the shoulders of John D. Rockefeller, Jr., > Jn the report of George P. West, order- fed printed and made public by the i federal commission on industrial rela- ' tions The Colorad Fuel and Iron company, contioiled by John D. Rockefeller, is declared to. hare led In formulating and cairylng out strike policies. The elder Rockefeller and his son „ are •jchaTgerl, Sfsf'/'wlih the \selection of \Incompetent and reactionary agents to 1 serve as executive officials of jthe com- pany,\ and second, with \giving their Jieartiest indorsement and support to Jtfiese officials after they had taken ac- tion' that precipitated the worst of the troubles\' Prominent Merchant Restored to Health by ^Fruit-actives\ . : _. ' BRISTOL, July 25th, f?14. \I had a stroke of Paralysis in Miych; and this, left me unable to walk or help myself and the pons-tipation. \was terrible. Finally, I took 'Fruit-a-tives' for the Constipation. This fruit medicine gradually toned up the nerves and. actually relieved the-paralysis. By the use of 'Fruit-a-tives' I grew stronger until all the palsy left me. I am now well and attend my store every day.\ ALVA PHILLIPS. Fruit juice is nature's own re'imedy and 'Fruit-a-tives'is made from fruit juices. 50c..a box, 6 for $2.50, trial si?e 25c. At dealers ..or from Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ogdcnsburg, New York. MOTES FROM FOREIGN LANDS. What Folks Are Doing on the Other Side of the Globe. Impressed with the gravity of the German-American situation as report- ed by the English press, insurance un- derwriters ; were offering odds aver- aging $7 to $4 that the two countries will not go • fo war. Thus far there have been no takers. Serious labor troubles have inter- vened again to embarrass the British government in its prosecution of the war. The Welsh coal ^miners, who re- turned to work several weeks ago at the instance of David IJoyd-Georpre. minister of munitions, after they had struck for hiirher wares, linve—Sfffritr quit work to the number of 25,000. Owing to the occupation by the Ger- mans of a great part of the pale of Jewish settlements 500,000 Jewish res- idents have been deported and prob- ably greater numbers have taken ref- uge in the interior provinces, where they have no legal rights. It has heen decided temporarily to permit. Jews to settle in the cities of the empire with the exception of those of Mnqcw nr-il DEATHS OF NOTED PEOPLE. Men and Women Who Have Died In the Laet Week. Mrs. Isabella M. Christie, organizer of the first woman's suffrage move- ment in New Jersey, died at her home, aged seventy-nine. Rear Admiral Alexander Hugh Mc- Corruick, who was commandant at the navy yard. Washington. 1898-1900. died in HUTNhvnl hospital at Annapolis. He was in his seventy-fourth year. He was born in the District of Columbia May 9, 1842. and was appointed to the Naval academy from Texas In 1859. • • • FROM THE SPORTING WORLD. rhie and That In Amateur end Profea- sional Athletic*. At a meeting of the board of direc- tors of_the Xational league Messrs. Gaffney of Boston and Ebbets of Brooklyn awarded .Pitcher Rube Ben- ton to the Giants. Rnbe Mnrquavd announced to sev- eral friends that lie had decided to go to the Federal league. Manager Mc- Graw\of't'he J Giants is determined to send Marqnnrd to the Toronto elub of the International league. McOraw said at the Polo Grounds (hat he posi- tively would not give an unconditional release to Marquard and that if the player did not report to Toronto Jt was not one of the Giant?' affairs. POLK LANSING'S COUNSELOR. New York City Official to Be Made .Ad- viser to State Department. I Fiank Lyon Polk, corporation coun- sel .for the city' of New York, is to be- come counselor to the state depart- ment, according to the best Informed Mends of the Wilson administration and of Mr. Polk. He will succeed in that office Bobert Lansing, the presi- dent's most truster adviser during the Bryan regime, who was made secre- tory of state when Mr. Bryan re- signed I Reports from Washington indicate tji.it after, canvassing the available Ihiateiial of the country the president, ivno Is an intimate friend of Mr. Polk md has frequently called him to Wnsh- ngton for important conferences, be- ievei,- Mrr-Polk appears from every, mglo the best \fitted for the present remendous responsibilities of the of- iee •' . /I/ILSON SHORTENS SENTENCE fakes a y*ai« Off Time Aged Forger • Had to Serve. President Wiisptt took a year off the i| Af eiltence p£ leff Sharum, serving three PWears ond-si* months in the Illinois jgnltenttfl&e iof toigtttg money orders ghaium\&\<61&: and helped the secret Wfioe CaJJtitfiSi' paper which was to 'AVebeen osediOr counterfeiting. The «*ddDM alio: *ewittea a $5,000 fine im- on J®id S&ttpfco oi Oitogo foi' ilatlim <?;HMtewaa1 *eve;fine Ifctfa, General Markets. PL.OUR—Easier; old spring patents. $6,30 a6.80; new winter patents, $5.30aS.50; new winter straights, J5a6.20; new Kansas stralgrhts. $5.90a64B, \ BUTTfiR—Barely steady; receipts, 8.2G8: creamery, extras (92 score), 25%a26c: creamery (higher scoring, 26%a27c.; firsts. 24a25%c: seconds, 22%a23%c EGGS—Steady; receipts, 12,349; fresh gathered, extras, 26a27c.; extra firsts, 24a 25Hc.; firsts, 22%a23'/4c: seconds, 21a22c ; nearby hennery whites, fine-to fancy, 33a 35c.; nearby hennery browns, 27a30c. CHEESE-Firm: receipts, 3.23C: state, whole milk, fresh flats, white and colored specials, _13al3Vic,; do., average fancy, lZ%,c. Live Stock Market. Pittsburgh, Aug. 27. CATTLE—Supply light, market steadyr choice, $9.50a9.75: prime, $9a9.40; good. JS.oOa S.74; tidy -butchers, #.25n9.75; fair, $y.2SnA; common, $6ji7; choice heifera, $7.BOa8.25. common Xo Jair h6ifers,—$5a7-; common \to\ good fat bulls, J4.50&.7.26; Bommdn to goo'd fat cows, $3.50a7. • - SHEEP AND LAAfBS-Supply llg-ht. market steady; prime, wethers, |6.15a(L25: good mixed, fc.75aG.10l fair mixed, &aS.S0; culls and commoni $2,50a4j heavy ewes. $4,50a&.25; lambs, J6a9.25| veal calves, $il.£0a 12;'heavy and thin calves, ?7a9, (JOGS—Becfeifits, 15 ao'uble decks! ntar- ket slow; prime heavy, Jf<W? heavy mixed. $7.78a7.80; mediums, ?8.I0',fiS.15{ heavy and light Yorkers and pigs, 3jS.15a8.25i roughs, t5.60a(S; stags, ?4.50a5. Tirefl, Acfiing: Muscles Rellefefl Ifafd work, ovejcexertion, mean stifij aoretnuscleB. Sloau'feLiniment light- ly applied, a little qttiefc, and your soreness disappears like mfl^iOi ''Nothing ever helped IikeyoarBloari's Linimeht. ,1 can never thatfk yow enough,\ writes one grateful user. Stops suffering, .• aohea And/ pains, An excellent counfefrlrritantj better ttntl cleaner then iftfistard. All tftafr gists, 3&e, Get a bottle to-d*^ JPene' Mum without; mbbihg. mimmfm Thtok Etiglisli Sa&fnanrieSink ^Ihe Russin'iis won in Riga bay onl the Baltic'the-greatest ncval battle of the war, while an English submarine sank the German battle cruiser Moltke of 23,000 tons, with a complement of more tharn .1.100 men: three.cruisers and seven torpedo boats. Four bargeloads of Germans who attempted to make a landing at Per- nigel, on the east shore of the gull' of Riga, about thirty-five miles north of the city, were exterminated and the barges captured. The president of the duma in an- nouncing the victory said the German soldiers were defeated by Russian troops without the aid of artillery. It appears froni a statement issued that the G-P-min-n battle cruiser Moltke. sunk by H British suhni trine, was tor- pedoed in the open Baltic sea and not in the gulf of Riga.' The Moltke is liot referred to by name. \Our gallant al- lies.\ says the statement, \succeeded In torpedoing in the Baltic one of the most powerful dreadnoughts of the German fleet.\ Renter's Petrograd correspondent says a semi-official statement adds an- other auxiliary cruiser tg the previous list of the German lpsses in the Gulf of Itiga. A dispatch from Petrograd says: \In addition to the German losses previously reported in the Riga battle a German submarine .was run ashore on the coast of Dago island fin the Baltic sea' just outside the Gulf of \aouotless also is lost.\ COTTON NOW CONTRABAND. British Promise Relief as Compensa- tion For Declaration—McAdoo Has $30,000,000 Fund. Cotton has been declared absolnte contraband of war H,p (^r 0 ? 1 according to a statement issued by the foreign office. France joins her ally In this. The statement declares that the. government proposes • to initiate measures to relieve depression which might temporarily disturb the cotton market because of the contraband or- der. The announcement reads: His majesty's government has declared cotton absolute contraband. While the circumstances might have Justified such action at an earlier period, his majesty's government are glad to think that the local conditions of American Interests likely to be affected are more favorable for such a step than they were a year apo, and. moreover, his majesty's govern- ment contemplate initiation of measures to relieve as far as .possible any abnormal depression which might temporarily dis- turb market conditions. The first step on the part of the fed- eral government to relieve the southern cotton planters has been taken. An- nouncement was made at the treasury department that Secretary McAdoo will- deposit $30,000,000 in gold in the fed- eral reserve banks of Atlanta, Dallas and Richmond. .If so large a sum is needed, in order to facilitate the financ, lng of the cotton crop. This step was \decided upon-as a result of the.action of the allies in putting cotton on the contraband list Assurance to cotton shippers that their cargoes for neutrals will not be confiscated if they come within the normal consumption, under the recent decree of the allies that cotton is con- traband of war, was given In»a state- ment issued today at the British em- bassy. FR'ANK LYNCHERS 'UNKNOWN.' Marietta Jury Sitting on Case Takes Three Minutes to Decide. That Leo M. Prank met death at the bands of .unknown persons, was the verdict of the coroner's Jury at Mariet- ta in the inquest on the lynching. The Inquest lasted about two hours. Eleven witnesses were examined. Many were asked, directly, ''Do you know who killed Prank?\ The answer was invariably, \No.\ The Jury delib- erated only three minutes. A special Session of the Cobb county (Georgia) grand jury to Investigate the; lynching of Leo M. Frank has been' called- by Judge R. L. Patterson of the Bide Ridge circuit court despite the coroner's jury verdict that Prank met. his. death at the hands of \parties un- known.'' ' • 0 The jury will meet Sept 11 Judge Patterson, it is believed^ aotedLnp'on advice\ TrbW\\G6vernor Harris, whose investigators are understood to have definite information hot made public. ^m mmi'S FAMILY BURNED. Mrs. Perahfrtg and Three* Children Die In Fire. Mrs, Persuing, wife of Brigadfai' General John ,L Pershing, and hef three little dangntei's Were burned to death at their liotne at the Pfe'sitliii in' Sail -Francisco. WnWen, her flve^yeni'' old Boy, was wsctied by soldiers, 'Jhe •tieflct cuildXeit aire Heie«, eiglit; Anna, six: Margni'et, three. Yv*ar,ren., the rescued child, wits found \randefing in the smoke In tue rear of tlie boose unhurt The bodies of Mw, Pershing - al)<J the otb&r: children Were found eliaifed in tneji' beds in toe front part of the tjonse, General: PeWbing' is now in cOnntnuM ot the ifjaiteff State! troops at Mffuto,. ffcx. ', fc*rtwk«- For Infants and Children,.; The Kind You Hare Always Bought ' Bears %he Signature! of Labor Day and Other Excursions Alexandria Bay, $2.45 (Including Tour of I*land») f Round trip. Ticket* on sale tyfonday, September 6. Re- turning same day. Consult local ticket agents for time of trains and other information. The Coon Gets the Corn The abjve expression is now being heard in ihou-ands of homes, offices and stores from hiip- p.- men ard women who have been relieved of the torture and suffering of painful, aehing.corns. Ask them, to explain and they say. \If you have corns e-et a package of Raccoon Plasters from your dealer as we did and the Coon will get the corn.\ simple tree. Address, Kaccoon, Le Eoy, N. Y. narrTif • \-^^•f mm Malone, Sept 14^5,^17,1H)5 64th Annual Exhibition. Providence Permitting This Will be the Best of All Great Racing Program Under the personal direction of Mr. W.J. Mallbn, Racing Secretary. $6,800.00 in Purses The Great Acrobatic and Fun Making Aggregation All from the New York Hippodrome. Base Ball. Good Music Excursion Rates on All Railroads, EVERYBODY COME! F. D. Kilburn, Pres. > S. M. Howard, Sec'y Thos. Adams, Treas. m 1 Mi$a$ ' A / -<v;a Do-not wai a. small sum Business c I Charles P.-Sua I p, \W. Perry-,' ,n iiiiin mini mi SeptembGrJL_8^J9 46th. Annual Exhibition I A Fair for All the People IN PURSES AND , i^ w w PREMIUMS Finest Exhibits in AH Departments EXCITING HORSE RACES, FAST BASEBALL SPECIAL FEATURES DAILY, BIGGEST MtTJWAY AUTOMOBILE PARADE AND SHOW BAND CONCERTS Freight Paul. You don't ' models as in a line of a stovf Many atl est improve cooking'. Writ or com Hampton's Comedy Dogs,JPretty and Pleasing Hillebrand &!DeLong, Acrobatic Artists A Ful l Program to Please and Entertain Every Day a Big Day Enjoy the Week at the Fair. September 7,8, 9, 10 Watch for Further Details, Ask for PremiumList. TO OTJE We wfii ond Distri Cumulath able Augi Per Cent- ] Which we The net e ing and ii and inter paying issued an< The Pi York, or< company the Dolla Wesh prospect! In ord ferred Si in. excess issued at OneHui Our I desire al be conte and at tl fore, we ferred S GEORGE W. SISSON, Jr., H. M. INGRAM, p. L. CUBLEY, President Secretary Treasurer W^M^kS£ATB FAIR We ferred € to sell si be any s